victor43 Posted July 17, 2016 Posted July 17, 2016 Hello I've twice boiled some water (tap water which is from a well) and forgot to turn off the stove. The water all dissipated but leaves this sandy colored substance at the bottom. Its quite visible and seems to be quite a lot of it. What could be causing this ? The pot is a kitcheaid relatively new pot. Thanks
fiveworlds Posted July 17, 2016 Posted July 17, 2016 Have you thought of silt?? sandy colored Bit vague. -1
StringJunky Posted July 18, 2016 Posted July 18, 2016 Hello I've twice boiled some water (tap water which is from a well) and forgot to turn off the stove. The water all dissipated but leaves this sandy colored substance at the bottom. Its quite visible and seems to be quite a lot of it. What could be causing this ? The pot is a kitcheaid relatively new pot. Thanks Limescale coloured with some suspended microscopic particles, probably, to give the slightly browner colour.
BabcockHall Posted July 18, 2016 Posted July 18, 2016 Ordinary water is not free of ions. Most ionic substances are not volatile; when the water is boiled away, they stay behind.
John Cuthber Posted July 18, 2016 Posted July 18, 2016 Rock dissolves in water, rather better than most people expect. If you remove the water, you are left with the rock. If the sandy stuff reacts with vinegar to produce bubbles of gas, that would suggest that it's mainly limestone- but other rocks are also options. 1
victor43 Posted July 19, 2016 Author Posted July 19, 2016 (edited) Have you thought of silt?? Bit vague. Hello and thanks for the response. I've never seen what does silt look like. Maybe I'll take a snapshot and post the picture here. From the Google search I did it does seem to appear like a type of silt. Is drinking water with silt in it dangerous ? Edited July 19, 2016 by victor43
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